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Claim: A Romanian newspaper ran a stirring pro-American editorial.
Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001]
Origins: Americans are pleased and fascinated when newspapers in other countries run strongly pro-American articles, as indicated by the resurgence of interest in Canadian Gordon Sinclair's 28-year-old radio broadcast and enormous attention paid to the purported Romanian editorial quoted above. Since the piece as presented here is undated, untitled, and unsigned; contains no publication information whatsoever; and is a translation of an article not originally printed in English, tracking it to its source was not easy. Fortunately, some helpful readers pointed us to its origins. This article was written by Mr. Cornel Nistorescu and published under the title "Cîntarea Americii" on As Associated Press reported about Mr. Nistorescu:
Nistorescu, managing director of the daily newspaper Evenimentul Zilei — News of the Day — published his editorial Sept 24, two days after watching a celebrity telethon in New York for victims of the
Additional Information:
Like his other columns, "Ode to America" was meant for domestic consumption. No one knows when — or how — the article first reached the other side of the Atlantic. But Nistorescu figures it began when someone pulled it off the English-language version of his daily's Web page and sent it to a friend. Since then, thousands of Americans at home and expats around the world have e-mailed it to friends, saying it captured their nation's spirit. It has been read out to U.S. soldiers and on radio talk shows and posted on U.S. Web sites. Nistorescu says he had no idea his "Ode to America" would resonate so far Nistorescu remains surprised and touched by the success of the piece, one of thousands he has penned in a more than 20-year career. "It is all about the American spirit and how freedom cannot be crushed," he says. Last updated: 15 April 2008 Urban Legends Reference Pages © 1995-2009 by Barbara and David P. Mikkelson. This material may not be reproduced without permission. snopes and the snopes.com logo are registered service marks of snopes.com. Sources:
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